what is the process by which phagocytes destroy a pathoger
I'm not sure if you're looking for a more specific answer, but phagocytes engluf pathogens and wastes via phagocytosis.
Phagocytes kill pathogens by engulfing them. hope that's helped!
PhagocytosisPhagocytes make up three-quarters of the body's white blood cells. They destroy pathogens by engulfing them.It's called phagocytosis. Macrophages mainly phagocytose the pathogens.
Activated by lymphocytes, Polymorph phagocytes absorb or envelope mostly bacteria, compartmentalize it, barrage it with enzymes attempting to destroy it, or radically alter it. Macrophages injest and destroy a wider variety of invaders, including viruses, and act as anitgen presenting cells which serve to increase immune response. Some epithelial and reticular cells also act as phagocytes in that the can injest and destroy or remove invaders.
The type of cell in the respiratory tract that functions as phagocytes is the macrophages. Macrophages are part of the immune system and play a crucial role in engulfing and destroying pathogens and foreign particles that are inhaled to help protect the body from infections.
macrophage
Yes, that's correct. Phagocytosis is a process where specialized cells called phagocytes engulf and consume pathogens, such as bacteria and viruses, to destroy them and protect the body from infections.
Engulf pathogens, backteria, foreign bodies
The final step of phagocyte mobilization is the migration of phagocytes to the site of infection or inflammation through chemotaxis. Chemotaxis is a process by which phagocytes move towards a concentration gradient of chemical signals released by pathogens or damaged tissue. Once phagocytes reach the site, they can engulf and destroy the invading pathogens.
They don't defend pathogens. They defend *against*pathogens. They poison them, they burn them with ozone / hydrogen peroxide / sodium hypochlorite / chorine dioxide, and then they eat them whole if necessary.
Phagocytes are destroying pathogens